this post was submitted on 02 Sep 2025
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Is it worthwhile to watch bad movies?

Absolutely.

I learned this the day I stumbled across Roger Corman’s catalog. To IMDB reviewers and casual film fans, he’s one of the worst director-producers of all time.

But zoom out, and he might be the most important filmmaker who ever lived. His “bad” movies launched Coppola, Scorsese, Cameron, and Demme. He gave us Little Shop of Horrors, Death Race 2000, and Chopping Mall. And he proved something Hollywood never wants you to know: you don’t need prestige or polish to inspire creativity—you just need to get the film made.

That’s the trick. “Bad” movies often give birth to greatness.

Even better, they’re usually more imaginative than the blockbusters. Why? Because the more money you sink into a project, the less risk you take. Think Disney is going to gamble with Marvel? Not a chance. One wrong move and the fans riot. Just look at the forums when a single casting decision goes sideways.

B movies don’t have that problem. They’re free to do whatever the hell they want because nobody’s watching with folded arms and a billion-dollar spreadsheet. That freedom means wild ideas—films that shoot for the moon.

Do they miss? Constantly. But when they land, it’s glorious—better than anything a safe blockbuster will ever deliver.

@movies@piefed.social

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[–] MimicJar@lemmy.world 6 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Another thing to consider is "bad" according to who?

I've watched poorly rated movies that I really enjoyed. I've watched highly rated movies that I really disliked.

Maybe you'll only enjoy a specific actor/performance, maybe you'll only enjoy a certain scene or storyline.

Sometimes it's worth rolling the dice.

Exactly right. Most of the time when w movie was "bad" it depends on the audience. Especially critic ratings. If I see a new will farrell movie if I just looked at ratings it would say bad, because the critics reviewing it probably watch several movies a day and to them it was tripe and stupid. To me, getting off work exhausted, maybe I want that.

It's all in who it was made for. The trick is find specific critics who frequently match your style, then start seeing what else they suggest